As the campaign season
progress toward the election and we get to know the candidates better, new
material will be added. Below are links to new material as it is
added...

CAVEAT and WARNING! Danger,
Danger. This page contains politically incorrect and
incredibly inflammatory remarks for anyone with a closed mind or one steeped
in the typical mind-set of academia where too often academic freedom means the freedom
to sing WITH the choir so long as you are using the same song book and are
on the same page. Since at my college I do not yet have Tenure, I write this with
some trepidation; but sometimes I simply cannot keep quiet when things are
this important to the country...

Well those of you that know me knew it had to happen sooner or later,
so here is where I can manage to enrage
everyone. I've always been an equal opportunity enrager for a long
time and sacred cows are often my favorite meals so why stop now? Some
were silly enough to ask what I thought about the candidates so here goes...

Regarding this overly protracted primary
season and its pathetic line-up of candidates, I think we have three liberals running for
President. To be perfectly honest with you I am both angry and frightened to think that
after all of our so-called progress from the days of Franklin and Jefferson
this collection of intellectual light-weights is the best we have to offer.
It is obvious to me that cutting across party lines, knowledge of or lessons
from history has nothing to offer this collection of individuals in terms of
an educational experience enlightening their views. And that leaves me
with little to say that is flattering to or about any of them.

I used to say that in order to vote for
someone espousing a liberal point of view I would have to throw out all of
my library's accumulated history and science and turn off the cognitive
functions of my brain; I never thought however that someday that need would
encompass the entire field of candidates running for office from both
parties.

I have tried to keep my head down and my
mouth shut about this but sometimes things are just too important. Unfortunately,
and to be realistic about it,
I don't think my feelings will matter but for what they are or are not
worth, here they are.

By way of set up let me reiterate that I
have often said before I think that within the next 8-10 years this country
will have set in concrete its future road, that is, whether it will continue
along the downhill slide I now see happening as we continue to dose the fire
that made us great and lead us in the remainder of this century to cease
being the beacon of light and opportunity to the world and just another
Balkanized, Europeanized center of mediocrity, or whether it will make a
major course correction to turn it around and regain the status of "leader
of the Free World" we once so proudly held.

Unfortunately I am no longer optimistic. My problem is that I do not see contained
in or exhibited by any of the candidates now running, the "stuff" that
would make me believe they can or will turn us around and that means that by
the end of their term (or terms should they get a second term) we will be
out of time.

Here's is how I see them individually:

Clinton:

She is a far left 60s vintage liberal trying to
pretend otherwise who is so devoted to power she will do anything or say
anything expedient to make things happen her way. She is willing to
swear one thing today and swear the opposite tomorrow if it has an effect on
the desired outcome and then look us straight in the eye and try to tell us
we all misunderstood and misquoted her. She will agree to do something
today and try to back out of it tomorrow when it is going against her.
Think of how the world community views that trait vis-a-vis making treaties
and accords with her. She and her husband share that
ability.

To give her her due, her shrill manner
and cut-throat approach makes her probably the toughest candidate out there
and the most likely to be a real leader. If only she held beliefs I would
like to see our nation follow I would seriously consider voting for her. She will try to disguise the origins and
foundations of her beliefs to make them more palatable to us but in the end her near socialistic policies
will, I believe, help drive us to economic ruin and further world decline.
She openly wants us Europeanized and as part of a global village (with her, ideally
at the helm) and if successful
at that will end the American Dream and potential pretty much on the spot.
However it seems that, mathematically, she is no longer the lilely candidate
so there is no reason to go on beating a dead horse.

And no, I have no trouble with the idea of
a woman president. I would have voted for a Golda Meir or a Maggie
Thatcher.

Obama:

As the obvious Democrat front runner he may
deserve a little more space. He's a brilliant orator but also an
open and unrepentant socialist and Chicago-bred machine politician with no positive
credentials and a case of anger and
disdain for this country's history and growth. Though his well crafted
rhetoric denies it, his actions, his off-the-cuff responses, and continued
long-term associations and testimonials makes it clear he sees only the warts
and scars and is blind to the goodness and positive side of it. When
he finally, a day or so ago, cut ties to his virulently anti-American church
after outrageous sermons piled up from former pastor and guest speakers
alike made it clear they were becoming a liability, he did NOT say he was
troubled by the messages of hate and separation being promulgated from that
pulpit but went into great lengths to describe how awful it was that members
of the congregation were being harassed by the press. He complained
attention was being drawn from his message and had apparently no clue that
in fact attention was being focused on a more important message based not in
what he presents as a speech but in how he conducts his life and
associations.

Additionally, he is
an ideologue completely unburdened by experience in or knowledge of the
world out there with which he, as President, will have to deal. Cut
from the same cloth as was Jimmy Carter, whose world and national view is economically challenged and
geo-politically naive (remember his famous line about the Soviets, "I can't
believe they lied to me!"), Obama's only saving grace is the hope that if he
wins, then like Carter before him, his ineptitude as President will prohibit
a 2nd term before it is too late. Although he says he wants to talk to
hostile foreign leaders, and, truth to tell, I'm not all that opposed to the
idea, I think they will eat him alive. Putin would have him for
breakfast and lunch, the Iranian crazy would have him for dinner and the
other tin-horn depots would have to settle for table scaprs. I am frightened not only by his
historical and geopolitical innocence but also by the host of wide
eyed students and faculty who seem to believe, in their own show of utter ignorance
of our own system, that he will do the things he implies he will do (he is
smart enough to never promise anything concrete lest he be called to task
for it later).

Obama says he wants "change" but is vague and
oblique about what that change will be and given his indoctrination in the
tenets of socialism combined with the mantle of so-called Black Theology (I HATE that
term, by the way) he scares me to death. He offers "hope" but it is the
exact same "hope" offered by Marx and nearly couched in the same language.
In fact, a close listening to his speeches makes it clear he has far more in
common philosophically with Marx (and I don't mean Groucho) than with
Jefferson.
He is a far better word smith, but has not significantly changed the tired old message of Gus
Hall, the Soviet Stooge who year after year ran for President on the
communist Party ticket. He is so closely aligned philosophically with
that world view I am surprised more unions have not backed him. (I think the
only reason they backed Clinton at first was because they, like many, just
assumed she was a shoo-in and wanted to be seen as backing the winning horse.)

And no, I have no issue with a Black
President; I would have voted for a Colin Powell or a J.C. Watts. It
is the core of Clinton's and Obama's beliefs, the socialist underpinnings
and despotic implications that I oppose. It is the fervent belief that
Government is the answer that I oppose. It is the attempt to make
people believe we need THEM to make things happen not in giving us the tools
to make them happen for ourselves to which I am virulently opposed. It is in
their belief that judges can be and ought to be legislators so long as they
are on the left that I oppose.

My fear
of Obama's beliefs and the disaster I foresee if they formed the basis for
our nation and culture's policies is only somewhat ameliorated
by my belief that he is so inexperienced in real leadership that he will manage
to create utter grid lock in congress and thereby unintentionally save us from the policies to come
forth. But no matter, that will be, even if only
for four years, wasted time as we stagnate and slide closer to our cultural
and national brink. It will be four less years for someone to turn it
around, if indeed such a person actually arises by then.

But in the long run I am more
frightened by the naiveté of the populace as noted above and their
willingness to, as they say is necessary about the movies (and for the same
reasons) "suspend their disbelief." Great orators have risen before on
the world stage to enrapture, engage, and then enthrall their
citizens with messages of hope and a plan out of their current despair even
if that despair is created literally or fictionally by the orators
themselves and whether or not the simple scapegoats being pointed to have
anything at all to do with the real problems. And the horror is that free men
and women have always been the ones who have paid the price.

Every major despot in the
industrial age has been supported by academia and the so-called
"intelligentsia." From Lenin to Stalin to Mao to Mussolini to Hitler,
all of them rose to power on the shoulders and support of students and academics searching for
enlightenment and someone to do the heavy lifting for them. All of them,
it should be noted,
could give a ringing speech too. Perhaps
there is something common to the mindset of those who experience the world
through the words and images of others and never directly (going on a cruise
does not count), and who have never actually had to earn a living or run a
business in the real world, that makes them susceptible to the idea of an
enlightened source of guidance rather than finding it in the systemic and
evolved wisdom of broader history and the people.

They have never had
to put their warm and fuzzy ideals to the acid test of real world societies
or face an intractable enemy outside of their well protected spheres so I
guess it is not surprising that their world views would be as insulated from
reality as is their environment. As Arthur
C. Clarke (author of '2001: a Space Odyssey" ) noted, "An intellectual is one whose education has surpassed their
intelligence." But I have to tell you, the realization that those are the prime supporters of Obama is, to me, a
major red flag. They are seemingly unaware that the world proffered by
their iconic progenitors Godwin, Rousseau, Marx, Shaw, etc. never
really existed in the first place outside of fevered fantasies and cannot
exist for long even when arbitrarily imposed until the core nature of humans
has changed significantly. Abstract thinking is a marvelous exercise
for the mind. But its relationship to the real world is, at best,
coincidental and more often at odds. To understand the mind sets and
thinking that helped evolve the civilized (and sometimes not so civilized)
world is important historically. But there is no test except time and
empirical observation for philosophical constructs and theories. If
there were a real world application governments and corporations alike would
have a CPO title of Chief Philosophical Officer to help guide them instead
of relegating those who study it to that fantasy world of academia where
they can amuse, confound, and plague students but never have to actually
test them. And if I wanted to be president and wanted to base my
political theories on philosophical tenets I would look to those that
historically seemed more likely to work over time to the benefit of the
citizens and the growth of the country than those that consistently had
failed in relatively short order. And that means I would be prohibited
from adopting the views of Obama and other modern liberals and secular
progressives.

Both of the above Democrat candidates have a vested
interest in the country's failures and misery on all fronts and that forms their
attitudes and vision. It also forms their rhetoric which has to focus
on failure and avoid ANY hint of success from the other side. It would
be to the howls of derision by their true believer followers if they even
hinted that ANYthing that could, however remotely, be linked to the greatly
despised
and all-hated Bush might not be an unmitigated disaster. The sophistry
employed to find a way to link every negative to the hated Bush-demon would
be amusing were it not so stupid and dangerous.

Don't get me wrong here, I think Bush will
go down in History as one of the lowest scoring Presidents ever. But no one
is 100% right or wrong. When you see them that way then you cannot
learn from either their successes or failures because when both are linked to a
personality not a real issue the results are always anomalous.
Additionally, you cannot build on a success if you
won't admit to its existence anymore than you can solve a problem you will
not admit exists.

Both Democrat candidates frighten me with
their world view which I believe is based on a completely erroneous view of
human nature and willful ignorance the realities of the real tigers out
there in the world community. I believe they are willfully ignorant of
the consistent and unbroken failures of all -- ALL -- of the social
experiments in the socialist/liberal/communal vein to create a viable and
self-sustaining economy for any group that has progressed beyond the tribal
level of society. In the history of man, there is not a single
instance of success for the socialist approach (without being propped up by
a patron government or where the ruling class is simply autocratic and
tyrannical) once the group has evolved beyond the tribal level.

But,
and worse in my opinion, they are also willfully ignorant of the dangers and are even
supportive of policies that are undermining the culture that made America a
world power. They would rather focus on what diversifies us than on
what unites us (despite rhetoric to the contrary) and they fail to see that
unbridled tolerance is simply unbridled cowardice. As the country song
said, "If you don't stand for something you will fall for anything."
Where is a JFK when we so desperately need him. His party has fallen
for anything. He asked us to think not of what the country could do
for us but what we could do for the country. Obama, Clinton, and the
rest of that choir are instead telling us what the country, under their
leadership WILL do for us as if we are entitled to is.

Why no one notices the incredibly obvious
diametrically opposed differences in attitude and approach of the current
liberal Messiah despite rhetorically idolizing Kennedy, is a mystery to me.
Kennedy wanted to make the people and country strong. Obama et al
wants to make the people dependant on and entitled to the government trough.
In proper Machiavellian form they understand completely that power is not
about money it is about dependencies; money is simply a by-product. I
think that is simply and purely evil.

So if the current crop of Democrats are
completely unacceptable to me
that would seem to leave me with...

McCain:

Ah, not so fast Bucko. I know that it is
easier to believe that if I dislike one side of the fray then I must adhere
to the other. That is typical shallow "zero-sum" political thinking and in this
case could not be further from the truth.

Here in McCain is a man smarting from prior political
abuse at the hands of the current buffoon-in-chief. He claims now to
be a conservative despite a long standing record leading easily and clearly to the exact
opposite conclusion. He also seems willing to compromise whatever his
core beliefs may be (and it is impossible to tell given the history of his
discourse and voting record that has had him coming down on all sides of every important
issue) for the attainment of this position. He seems to want it more
for vindication than anything else.

He will sit down with an interview with a
conservative host and swear to do things in that conservative vein that he
has not only consistently voted against in the past but, in interviews with
liberal hosts, swore NOT to do only days before. In that regard he is
simply a softer spoken Clinton pretending to the other side (or at least the
middle) of the political
aisle. Clinton and Obama are openly and eagerly socialistic in their
view of how the government should operate but at least that is honest and
gives us a position to debate. McCain is a complete mystery to me and
I'm not sure what he believes. Perhaps his fractured voting is honest
and indicative of a person who sees the complexities in each case better than
most and votes according to some internally guiding code. But he has
not made that case either by example or rhetoric and until he does I've no
choice but to think he simply floats with a breeze that is blowing our of an
undetermined direction.

And if it IS the case, then stick by it.
Hold to those values and do not cave in to either liberal or conservative or
other pulls on you. WE need a person of principles now more than ever.
The others are utterly devoid of them; sadly there is no real indication
McCain has them either.

That scares me. If he is indeed a man
of principle then I want him to enumerate those principles and relate them
to his record so we can see how it works. But he could be the real
'Manchurian Candidate" for all I know and that lack of consistent foundation
frightens me, in may ways, far more than the radical socialist leanings of
the others which can be debated and confronted.

So my bottom lines is that not one of these
characters now running, in my opinion, and despite their sometimes well
crafted
rhetoric, seems to be in this Presidential race because they are primarily
interested in the COUNTRY they must swear to protect or the Constitution
they must swear to uphold. All of them seem willing to declare the
night as day and vice versa if it suits their purposes and ambition at the
moment and then turn around and say the opposite and either deny or
rationalize the "apparent" contradictions.

Oh puh-leeeeeze... spare me... I
don't want ANY of them to be my president.

The only good news in all of this is the relative lack of
power a President actually has. They all claim as candidates that they will do this or do
that but in truth the Executive branch can only ask Congress to do things:
their real job is to execute (put into action) the laws enacted by Congress.
Not that I have much faith in Congress either these days, but at least there
are a gaggle of them to even out the playing field or get the competing
viewpoints aired.

Despite rhetoric leading the uninformed
population to the contrary belief, the President has virtually no
single-handed control over the economy, is completely reactive to foreign
policy (since they have zero control over other country's or players that
effect the political realities of the world), and in this day and age would
have trouble fixing a parking ticket. They may ASK for things like tax
increases or cuts or military action approvals, but in the end they can only
ACT on them if Congress votes to OK them. They may want to interfere
or help in State issue including disasters but are prohibited by State and
Federal law from doing so until ASKED by State Authorities. We blame or
praise the President and label actions or events with their names but
quickly forget (if we ever really understood) that they are acting ONLY after Congress has said OK. They
can deny Congress access to certain papers and people but they cannot
enhance their own power or act on much of anything of real consequence
without Congressional oversight. They can veto, but even that can be
overridden.

After the experience with this current
President and the blunders stemming from Congressional approval of requested
actions, the Congress will hopefully be extremely hesitant to grant any extension of
Presidential power or to give unrestrained preliminary OK's to actions no matter who
wins, so that will
solve some impending issues. But we have such bigger fish to fry it stuns me
how much we are now paying attention, once again, to partisan talking points
and avoiding reality. I think those issues include...

Oil and our reliance on it has ceased being
an economic/geo-political issue and has become a political partisan one; and
in doing so it
will, I strongly believe, bite us in the backsides big time as we are blind to the real behind-the-scenes issues. None of these
candidates are talking about the clear indicators
that we will likely loose our major sources of oil (Mexico and Canada) in
the near future as those go from oil exporters to oil importers themselves;
we are not talking about the issues of short term pricing being an issue
involving our suicideal refusal to get at our own oil reserves, the
hording of tankers by Iran and 'slow-steaming' on orders from commodities investors, and no one is
addressing the lack of refining
capacity even if someone DID increase production; and no one is exploring
the suggestions by world experts that the days of "sweet" oil are over as we
have used it up from middle east sources who vastly overestimated their
reserves and are now into "sour" sulfurous oil that is much more costly to extract and
refine. All in the face of us sitting on huge quantities of our own
oil and oil bearing minerals that would last at least until the new
alternatives were developed.

Meantime we argue over those alternatives and refuse talk about R&D and
production timing and to adopt short term solutions to get us through
to the time when those alternatives can come on line. And we do it NOT
because those answers are not readily available to anyone willing to
research it, but because they run headlong into political ideologies which
appear to be more sacred than the future of this country. The left,
with a vest ed interest in failure and its lockstep belief in Gore's
version of anthropogenically caused global warming appear to actually want
oil to be an economical horror show thinking, again naively and disabused
of knowledge of the cultural structure of the country and non-Euclidian
layouts of our cities, that it will make us wake up tomorrow with a pain
in our pocket book and quit driving. I would rather hope that pain
in the pocketbook makes us wake up to who has REALLY created that pain and
throw them all out of office to start over.

We also refuse to acknowledge the presence
of real bad guys and bad regimes out there. In the pursuit of greater
diversity for its own sake we have turned tolerance into cowardice and can no longer stand up
for core values (an action deemed illegal in growing segments) but are asked
and sometimes required to
accept and adopt the core values of cultures that will destroy what we are.

We have forgotten that at one time to discriminate, that is to tell right
from wrong and good from bad, was a good thing.
All in the benign name of diversity we allow things our own consciences tell
us are unacceptable to continue and even flourish. We have reached the
insane point where the over-sensitization of a tiny minority is allowed to
become a detriment and problem for the vast majority WHO HAVE NO RECOURSE
BUT TO QUIETLY ACCEPT IT.

We also cannot openly note that the Sacred
Text of a growing and increasingly belligerent portion of the world openly
and clearly and unambiguously calls for the destruction of this country's founding beliefs and
the replacement of our laws by theirs upon pain of death by the "Striking
off the heads" of those who refuse.

We accept as OK a set of cultural values that
allows women to die in fire when they cannot find their veils before
escaping the flames to be seen in public. or who are sentenced to stoning
for the crime of being raped. We allow them to remain masked in open
court and to conduct religious activities in public places including
schools that are denied to the religion of those who founded the country
in the first place while we remove the symbols of the foundations of our
own laws.

We are supposed to accept the cultural
values of corruption, machismo, and the mordida where women are seen as
either saints or whores with nothing in between and right is defined by the
player with the largest bucks or biggest canons.

We have a country and
culture on our border working hard to become one of history's failed states
because they do not have the power or will to stand off the drug lords who
increasingly call the shots both ballistically and politically. Yet we
also do not
have the internal will to try to safeguard ourselves from the spill over.
In San Diego county near the border US citizens are being kidnapped from
their homes, dragged across the border and held for ransom. And we are
afraid to create ill will by sending a force to get them or even openly
decrying it. The FBI had
to issue a public warning to students during this last spring break about the high
likelihood of being a victim of kidnapping or other violence in the border
towns south of here. Yet we are asked to accept with open arms those
who accept that condition in their homeland and then wish to come here and turn
us into them. And even say it is OK to do so
illegally!

None of our candidates is talking about any
of these or other substantive issues that will have profound effects on our
country in the near and far futures; not one has addressed or offered a
cogent, cohesive, comprehensive plan to deal with these issues. They
have, instead, pandered to the self-defined 'victims' in our society because
though they have failed to read their histories they have learned carefully
from the pages of Machiavelli that power, real power, is not about money but
about dependencies. And if they can convince large portions of the
population that they are actually the victims they want to be (so others are
to blame for their situations) and further that they are victims who need that politician to save them, then
they get power via being elected. And from THAT position the money, as a
by-product, starts to flow freely.

Of course those victims are so entrenched
in their self defined victimhood and the goodies that flow from it they
never notice (and we, who pay for it are also to blind to notice) that it
NEVER gets solved. Why? Because it is not supposed to.
Think about it... if it got solved the cause would go away and with it, the
power, and then the money. Not one of the major polarizing issues on the table today from
abortion to pornography to race to gun-rights to definitions of marriage is
likely to ever be completely solved because although the trenches are filled
with true believers beating up on each other, the politicians pulling the
strings would lose major cash cows and political dependencies if the issues
evaporated via real solutions. The leaders on either side cannot ever
afford to allow that to happen.

There were once individuals and even groups
of politicians who stood in
opposition to that, who argued that what the population needed was not a
handout or another entitlement but an education so they could learn how to save
themselves. That seems no longer to exist. Teddy Roosevelt showed that
you can build a self-dependent society while also protecting the environment
and those things need not be in opposition to one another. He is now
seen as anachronistic since he expected people to be responsible for
themselves and pay for their own stupidity, laziness, or ineptitude. Another
history lesson ignored.

So who AM I supporting?

None of them!

I honestly don't want ANY of this group of
three to be my next President.

One
of them, of course, will be. I cannot stop that. But that
outcome, in my opinion will be to my and my
country's great loss. The differences between them is a matter only of
degree but in the last two elections I voted against what I believed (and
still believe) was the lesser of two evils. But that lesser evil was
still, as the smoke cleared, beyond the pale of acceptable.

I truly do not want to do it again.
So if you love one of these characters then by all means vote for and
support them. For me it does not matter; the only real differences is
which will accelerate our decline faster and since that is a toss up, it
doesn't matter to me. But to me, not one of them is worth my efforts to
support in anyway including debate. I'd rather put my mental energies
elsewhere into things that might possible be positive and something I can
believe in. I don't believe in any of these people.

Well, it is clear that Obama
or McCain will be the next president regardless of my beliefs about them.
But the ensuing weeks of their 'campaigning' has only strengthened my
feelings about them as noted above. Obama is seen on the left as a
political messiah despite astonishingly minimal credentials. He
recently took a trip around the world as if a day or two in various
countries would teach him all he would know to deal with the complex
geopolitical realities on both grand and petit scales. What he did
demonstrate was that he needs tro stay closer to the teleprompter.
There is no doubt that he can give (and presumably write???) a great rousing
speech. But when forced to speak off the cuff he is lost. Taking
points seem to all rush in at once and the result is gibberish. Of
course his disciples hear the full text of the jumbled talking points and
think they have heard a message from on high. I hear a man long on
nerve, short on data, and lacking a grasp of the complexities a president
must face. Dan Quayle must have gotten a good laugh when seeing some
of the televised news conference performances.

McCain is no stranger to
gaffes either. He has made more than his share. Far more
experienced in the nuances and complexities of the world he still seems to
not have found his own core. His rhetoric precludes him from
pretending to adopt the base of his party and his moving target values seem
to inhibit his grabbing themes important to the folks and sticking to a view
of them.

For all of his verbiage about
hope and the audacity of change, Obama's senate record is abysmal.
More often than note he simply voted "present" when he wasn't voting for the
far left position. A "present" vote is a CYA vote when you do not want
political flack for taking a stand. I think they should be outlawed
and there was a time in this country when the cowardice of making a
"present" vote would have been seen for what it was and the blighter would
have been voted out at the next election not glossed over by a dreamy eyed
press. Fortunately he has not had that much effect anyway since he has
not been there that much. Adding up his actual days on the Senate
floor they come to 143 days. THAT is his Federal government experience.

Yet McCain's 22 years have not
seemed to have helped him find a center either. You'd think a bona
fide hero would have such an internally consistent standard of values as to
be unshakable. Maybe he had it and it went away in the light of
political practicalities. I don't care why however.

But one of them will win.
And perhaps the real question is to examine not the man, since neither is,
in my opinion, worthy of the position, but the other ripple effects of an
administration with them at the helm. That would start with growing
data on such things as their vice-president pick and who they would likely
put in the upcoming Supreme Court vacancies. WE won't know their
cabinet picks until it is too late but perhaps we can get some clues as the
campaign progresses.

So now my focus has shifted
from the individuals, about whom I now know all I need to know, to the
periphery of the campaigns, More to follow...

Well we are getting closer,
conventions are over, VPs are picked, and we are but 40+ days from the
election. I've been asked by several people what I now think and if I
have managed to change my opinion. Interestingly I've been asked that by
friends on both sides since, as you've notice, I have not favored either
side.

I can tell you first of all my
bottom line conclusions have not changed. I truly do not want either
of them as president. But once again, our country seems politically
impoverished and we will end up having to select the least awful among two
very marginal at best candidates. In the last addendum I mentioned new
criteria for selection as being such things as running mates and potential
at the periphery of the president's power.

First it must be understood
clearly how little power the President really has. Their main function
is to be the lightening rod; the scapegoat for all things bad and the poster
boy for all things good while the congress actually does the stuff we
applaud or deride. The president can suggest but not command. His
"budgets" are suggestions only, for example' the real budgets are created in
the incredibly powerful Appropriations committee. He can veto a law
but it can be overridden by congress. Every law that you hate and
blame on a president was written by and passed by the Congress. If the
President signed it and let it pass that does not mean he created it, liked
it, or approved of it; it often means he knows he would be overridden anyway
so why not save the fight for another day. Whether or not the current
President wanted this war, he would still be sitting at his desk fuming over
it had not Congress (including Clinton and Kerry) voted to make it happen.

Another power that should not
exist in its present form (in my opinion) is the Supreme Court.
Constitutionally its only role is to rule on whether or not a Federal law
(or regional law under appeal) falls within the approval of the U.S.
Constitution. Period. That is it. It should be
non-political, non-partisan, and purely legalistic. That is why it is
the THIRD arm of government as a watchdog over the other two, not a pawn of
one or the other.

But over the last half century
it has become far more activist and has by default started interpreting and
spinning the Constitution to, in effect, legislate from the bench. I
am completely opposed to that and think it blatantly unconstitutional, but
it is, despite my opposition, the reality of today. Consequently the
appointment of justices takes on an importance it should never have.
Doubt it? When both parties start applying litmus tests for their pet
causes instead of simply looking to Constitutional scholarship then
something very different is at play than what was imagined in the
Constitution.

So suddenly the President does
have some power over legislation even though it is indirect. Assuming
each candidate will pick justices based on their core political values, now
there are some reasons to look closer since several seats on the Court may
become vacant during the next two terms.

So let's bring this up to the
moment.

Obama

Obama has done nothing to
change my mind and has in fact reinforced it at every turn. His
policies are increasingly openly socialistic. He truly believes that
the government is and should be the solution and that we should cheerfully
pay for it to be our great benevolent father led, of course, by his personal
vision for what is good for us. In that view the congress has the
simple role of taking his "suggestions" and turning them into laws designed
to implement his ideas about how the government should take care of us.
of course in the end we would all be dependent on the government we are
paying for and soon become like the former Soviet Union where people had no
concept of individuality and individual responsibility for their own destiny
but that is, apparently to both him and his backers, a small price to pay
for such a warm and fuzzy place as he imagines. To me it is not warm
and fuzzy on its face and in any case is doomed to disaster for us as a
people and a nation. I am so unalterably opposed to any such notion that I
could never vote for him regardless of other views.

He prefers to nuance
everything rather than act decisively. That certainly has its place.
But the world stage is filled with real tigers, most notably the re-emerging
Russia. Thanks to Carter and Clinton our military ability to hold them
at bay is almost non-existent and our intelligence capability to see it
coming is equally pathetic. Putin and his puppet Medvedev will eat
Obama for lunch like they would have done (and their predecessors DID)
former President Carter. The world in the post cold-war period is far
more complex and far more dangerous than he seems to be aware.
We are setting the stage for a prolonged peace or the next war and this next
term will be critical to that path. I do not think Obama is up to it.

A two week whirlwind tour to
introduce the new Messiah to the world does not a foreign policy expert
make. And during that trip he undermined several important processes
including the transfer of power in Iraq which he suggested should be
postponed till the next Presidency (which he expects to be him).
Personally that rises to treasonous levels but it is a different issue
though it shows judgment potential somewhat clearly. His lame reaction
to the Russian invasion of Georgia was precisely what I expected and what I
expect in the future. I do understand that the reality is that his
political ancestors had removed from us any possibility of real action
anyway but his response was not phrased to indicate frustration at that,
rather delight in it and a desire to talk our way out of it. He is so
utterly clueless about the realities of our opposition around the world as
to be farcical were he running for President with a good chance of winning.
In the last week we have once again seen the North Korean despot throw talk
back in our face. When will we learn that the thugs of the world are
playing us for the saps we are becoming?

His VP pick is Joe Biden.
Biden is an old line secular humanist progressive Senator with all the
correct liberal credentials to satisfy the party hard liners and to add the
appearance of experience to the ticket. But as we saw clearly in the
primaries, Obama is not one to share the limelight and in any case I think
the day of the Cheney-like powerful VP are over and the more trraditional
role for them will be returning. So Biden is, to me, simply more
reinforcement. Especially now we are seeing his rhetoric escalate into
the almost pure socialistic perspective he really believes since Obama has made it
possible to be honest about it.

Obama also remains incredibly
and transparently disingenuous. Promising audiences where he stands on things in direct
and flagrant opposition to his voting records and his previous writings on
the subject has become common place. For example he promises to
support the 2nd Amendment and says he will not take anyone's gun away.
But he voted to uphold the D.C. law essentially banning all firearms from
the district, voted in Illinois to ban firearms, wrote in his book about how
they were the root of all violent crime (of course elsewhere he wrote that
the root of it was the nasty "haves" holding down the victimized "have nots"
as if this were a zero-sum game) and should be eliminated. I know some
good people who believe that too even though I deeply disagree, But
the point here is that his history is clear as to where he really stands and
his campaign rhetoric is completely opposite to that so why would anyone
believe anything he says? That he does it makes a clear statement
about his beliefs relative to his disciples.

Obama, to his credit,
continues to prove he is a powerful orator when working from a prepared
speech or re-giving something he has completely in hand. But he is not
fast on his feet intellectually and in today's world I think a leader will
need to be.

So what about. ..

McCain

McCain continues to disappoint
me in not seeming to be able to find a core to hold on to philosophically.
And he too has been disingenuous about his campaign promises compared to his
record in Congress. A wonderful example of that is happening now
vis-ŕ-vis the financial crisis where he is up in arms clamoring for
solutions to problems he himself helped to create. His solutions are
more credible than Obama's but I have no reason to believe he actually
believes in them or would intend to implement them. His work on the
McCain Feingold issue or the McCain-Kennedy bill stand in stark contrast to
some of his campaign rhetoric.

I do think he has a far better
grasp of the world stage and the geopolitical realities of it than Obama,
and that is important to me but it is a single issue.

So, overall, I've not changed
my mind about him either, personally. But in his case the periphery
takes on greater importance because of his age. There is a live option
that he may not live out his term (or terms). That means his VP choice
is important. Personally I think he made a pretty good one.
Palin is bright, and she has a track record of cleaning up corruption in a
notoriously corrupt (politically speaking) state and did it against both
Republicans and Democrats equally. I do like that. She has been
decisive in several political leadership roles and has many more days in a
decision making office than Obama has logged in the Congressional debating
club. She seems cut from the same cloth as a Golda Meier or a Maggie
Thatcher and I like that a lot.

No, before you ask, I do not
agree with all of her personal opinions or positions. But she has also
shown that she separates those cleanly from her governmental duties despite
the hyperbolic prophesies of disaster from the opposition. If McCain
survives his term then she will be politically irrelevant except as a likely
future candidate.

I also much prefer the
potential Supreme Court Candidates McCain will likely pick since I see them
more as Constitutional scholars more than political activists for either
side. Yes, I understand that makes them more conservative since it
seems to be the more liberal minded who want to change the Constitution to
suit there needs instead of stay within its rather strict guidelines.
But until we have a Constitutional convention that re-writes things, as is
specified in the document itself, I do not want anyone from either side
attempting to pretend what the document clearly says means something else.

Of course Palin is a far
better speaker than McCain who is more like listing to a tape recorder in a
cigar store indian. But I'm not voting for oratory; I'm voting for
action. Lincoln proved a wretched speaking voice and simple oratory
did not hold him back from greatness when the challenge came to him.
So that has fascination but no voting appeal to me.

So where am I standing now?
I still really do not want either of them. But since I will have to
chose one or the other, I cannot find a single thing to vote for in Obama
and far more to vote against. I can find a single thing to vote for in
McCain. Pretty narrow margin indeed but I'd say today I would hold my nose
and vote for McCain but only because I am so opposed to and frightened by
the prospect of Obama. However the race is not yet over. World and
domestic issues have time to arise. Congress is considering an energy
bill that is, in my view, idiotic, and I've not heard and solid positions
from either. I think along with foreign issues, energy and our
dependence on foreign resources is a disaster waiting to happen.
No wait... it has already started to happen and the Congressional Neros are
fiddling while the country burns.

Of far greater importance than
Obama and McCain, in my opinion, is what will happen in the congress because
that is where the real power is. Surely hard core democrats have to be
livid over the inaction and failed promises of the current democrat
controlled congress who were going to run Bush out of town on a rail and
right all of the perceived wrongs of his administration. Are the
democratic voters really that partisan and blind as to not see it?
Well, it does look like it if polls are even close to correct. And if
they continue in their collective ineptitude then it perhaps it doesn't
matter who is President. Since the congress will simply occupy its
time with partisan wrangling and manage to not implement any of the
suggested policies anyway. That will simply prolong our disastrous
fall from national grace but since I'm older now maybe it will postpone it
until I'm not here to see it.

Well, Obama won the election.
Not by much, he got 52% of the vote but that's enough to do it. Of
course to listen to the media you would have thought the Messiah had come
and world salvation was at hand. He started off with some pragmatic
choices for his cabinet that I thought were pretty good ones, all things
considered. Of course it quickly returned to Chicago politics as usual
when he nominated to people who had failed to pay taxes but then they were
Democrats so it was all quickly overlooked as simple mistakes.

But the big issue will be the
economy. He made the mistake of running on a platform that clearly
said he could solve the woes from this situation. He did it by blaming
previous politicians, mostly Republicans of course, for creating it.
We could overlook that little historical blindness as campaign rhetoric but
once you lay the blame at the feet of politicians you also clearly state
that politicians can fix it. I think this one will come back to bite
him hard for two reasons. The first is that he was wrong on both
counts.

Politicians certainly
contributed to the depth and extension of the situation that created the
economic crisis but they did not create it. Liberal policies wanting
to level the playing field so that everyone, even those far from qualified
financially, could live the dream pour fuel on the fire, but it was a
perfect storm of natural economic cycles during periods of blind greed and
corruption, punctuated by the inevitable burst of a very fragile and long
overdue bubble that ripped the foundation from what had become, on a world
wide basis, a financial house of cards. Overleveraged
investments and non-funded government entitlements and programs then
contributed their share and blew the remaining walls down.

However he said HE could fix
it and with majorities in both houses the Democrats quickly produced their
dream spending bill, called it a stimulus, and trotted it out. When
you are nearing bankruptcy you cannot spend your way back to financial
health. But as a Socialist it is the only solution allowed in your
playbook so a gigantic bill is being proposed. And, true to form,
although some of the provisions do in fact address portions of the problem,
it is laden with feel good, make work entitlement programs from the "we will
take care of you" philosophy. Bush proved clearly, and to the
justified derision of the Democrats, that providing small amounts of cash to
the populace simply ends up in savings or paying down debt and does not make
it back in the economy in any meaningful way. So their pan includes
repeating that. FDR showed that make-work projects cannot solve
national economic issues: it took a war to do it. So their plan
includes those types of actions. Based on the review of a number of
articles by leading economists, if this plan is put into practice I would
predict we will see a short term small bounce and then the disaster will
return in spades because the underlying root causes are ignored.

What I hope is that after the
initial failure of the bill to win any Republican support and even a few
Democrats were opposed, they will go back to the table and create something
more workable. But in the end I do not believe we have a problem
vulnerable to a political solution and Obama is not being wise to get
suckered into making people think that is the case since he will carry the
expectations and by hammered by the blame when it fails.